Yesterday I had a “virtual world vibe” going. At 5:30 a.m. when my dog Jack woke me up offering to take me for a walk, the first thing I noticed on my mobile was a series of tweets from Chris Rasmussen, NGA’s social software guru, posted the night before. Twitter is interesting for a lot of reasons, but one is the ability to snatch asynchronous stream-of-consciousness statements, from strangers and friends alike, as they pass by in the microblogosphere conversation.

Chris went on a tear about Second Life, with several hilarious observations and comments within the space of an hour, so here are several from his public Twitter feed:

I don’t have an iPhone (I like my Windows Mobile 6.1 platform better, on a touch-screen Samsung i760) so I miss iPhone news sometimes. I’m tardy in learning that, In the words of one of my colleagues at the Institute for Advanced Technology in Governments, “Loopt is launching their app on iPhone and is using Virtual Earth. How did Apple ever allow that to happen?” 🙂

Fact: Chris Anderson, WIRED editor in chief and author of the Internet-era classic book “The Long Tail,” also runs a couple of Ning social networks focusing on what the intelligence community would call IMINT, orimagery intelligence – specifically DIY Drones, “a site for all things aboutamateur Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs): How-to’s, videos, discussion and more,” and PictEarth, “a Social Network used to collect, link and geotag RC, UAV/UAS or Kite derived Earth imagery for use in 3D Globe Programs including Google Earth, Virtual Earth, World Wind and ArcGIS Explorer.”

Analysis: With these sites, Chris Anderson is promoting what he calls “Crowdsourced Aerial Imagery.” In the mission statement for DIY Drones, he writes that “Reasons to make your own UAV range from a fun technical challenge, student contests, aerial photography and mapping (what we call “GeoCrawling”), and scientific sensing. We are primarily interested in civilian, not military, UAV uses here.” (Emphasis is in the original.)

Let’s presume that individual DoD or intelligence-agency personnel have an interest in such issues, and maybe even in spending their personal time by keeping current and following the crowd’s interest in such topics, by participating in these new social networks. One can then assume that others from foreign intelligence might have some interest in tracking those very IC personnel, by observing their activities within social networks (and not just Ning ones). No spectacular logic needed for that.

The CIA has had some challenges in understanding their field presence within the Long Tail.

I’d like to go on record with a date-stamp and predict that Bill Gates has begun a successful counter-revolution. I’d bet on MS, not Google. When I visited the Googleplex HQ in 2001, the foosball tables and personal chefs already gave an air of dotcomdom…. the ensuing years and successful innovations at Google notwithstanding, I’d bet corporate rigor and stamina over “Do no evil” every time. And until I see corporate rigor in Google, they still have some flame-out possibility….

In the meantime, we’re keeping a very open mind, on Google Earth (evaluating it alongside ESRI’s competitor ArcGIS Explorer and MS Live MapPoint) and on Google search applicability. There’s a lot of capability driven by metadata-tagging that can’t be done just with search.